95 is where its at for total consistency. Power from the technology has advanced so much that feel and control should be the main aim as the rest is already there aka spin and pop.
The best racquet in terms of groundstrokes is ezone, but in terms of slice and volleys 95 to 98 sq inch with beam size less than 23 is much more effective. Doubles play wise 95 to 98 is effective, but in long rallies ezone is better
Has she tried the 97 ? curious to see her thoughts. I tried both, the 97 fell a bit more powerful without loss of control, those rackets are amazing for people who can hit fairly hard or at least go full swing. Confidence level is going right up
We have not yet heard if or when it will be available but would assume possibly this summer based on how the cadence of their previous extended racquets has been! Michelle, TW
Great question! One we will have to bug her about next time we see her as I know she has her racquets matched and weighted and not 100% sure where the weight is and what the specs have come out to! We will do our best to find out and let you know. Michelle, TW
In your opinion, if you had to choose one YONEX racquet to go to battle with for DOUBLES only, which would you choose? Would that change if you were 65 years old? I would be grateful for your thoughts.
The vcore 95 if you are doing doubles only and of older age. It offers good control and is fairly flexible which is light on your arm. It isn't as forgiving as the ezone 98 though so it depends on your playstyle as well. The vcore is overall more precise offer less spin while the ezone 98 offer less control but more spin.
Ezone 100. You can also do a 100L version if you need better maneuverability. Bigger sweet spot, put away power etc etc Look around and you will notice the head sizes get bigger as you get older.
@@scouter_9599 I would love to see a video on this subject. You see why I asked - it is a "tricky question". I was personally confused by which racquet to chose as a 65 year old 5.0 all-court doubles specialist.It's hard for the average player to demo every racquet in the Yonex line - although you have. That is why I asked. Thank you for your input.
@@mrfofung I would love to see a video on this subject. You see why I asked - it is a "tricky question". I was personally confused by which racquet to chose as a 65 year old 5.0 all-court doubles specialist.It's hard for the average player to demo every racquet in the Yonex line - although you have. That is why I asked. Thank you for your input.
@@markmoore5981 Yeah it ultimately does come down to preference too so your best bet is to go to a tennis store that offers demos or demo off of tennis warehouse. I demoed all the rackets I ever used at a nearby tennis shop with their own private court multiple times before purchasing them so I know if I really liked it or not. Best of luck in finding the racket that best suits your playstyle!
It is pretty forgiving considering it is a 95, however the sweet-spot is enhanced on all the 2023 VCORE racquets, so not quite as big as the 98 or 100. Troy, TW
Where else but Tennis Warehouse?! We literally helped her stock up when the last ones were available, think she ended up getting 12 pairs of the last GPs that we had! Michelle, TW
thanks asia, and thanks TW! hope you guys keep doing these types of videos ✨
Thanks for watching! We definitely will do our best to do more like this!
Michelle, TW
Great review as she really tried all shots. The real test is play a competitive set
I loved the SV 95 Bought it twice but each time it trashed my wrist after 2 hrs!! Miss that raquet still today
95 is where its at for total consistency. Power from the technology has advanced so much that feel and control should be the main aim as the rest is already there aka spin and pop.
I just tried the Head Prestige Tour 300. Not a bad stick. It's all about control.
The best racquet in terms of groundstrokes is ezone, but in terms of slice and volleys 95 to 98 sq inch with beam size less than 23 is much more effective.
Doubles play wise 95 to 98 is effective, but in long rallies ezone is better
Has she tried the 97 ? curious to see her thoughts. I tried both, the 97 fell a bit more powerful without loss of control, those rackets are amazing for people who can hit fairly hard or at least go full swing. Confidence level is going right up
Wait, there's an Vcore 97? Do you mean 98?
Or are you talking about Vcore Pro/Percept?
@@rawrss there a vcore pro 97, 97d, 97H :) the Percept is the new line, i think it s just a relaunch, new color new name that s it
Great form and amazing manners...truly inspiring!
Your volley is just perfect😃
We think so too!😍
When will the Vcore 98 plus be available? Thank you
We have not yet heard if or when it will be available but would assume possibly this summer based on how the cadence of their previous extended racquets has been!
Michelle, TW
Hi! I know Asia has said that her EZONE is weighted, where is the weight applied?
Great question! One we will have to bug her about next time we see her as I know she has her racquets matched and weighted and not 100% sure where the weight is and what the specs have come out to! We will do our best to find out and let you know.
Michelle, TW
@@tenniswarehouse Awesome! Thank you so much for your prompt reply!☺️
She is too nice!!!!
If she wants more control then why not ezone 98?
Yeah, or even string her racket a little bit tighter.
Exactly
@@philippedebruin yeah, this looks like some kind of marketing ploy
Should match swingweights first
In your opinion, if you had to choose one YONEX racquet to go to battle with for DOUBLES only, which would you choose? Would that change if you were 65 years old? I would be grateful for your thoughts.
The vcore 95 if you are doing doubles only and of older age. It offers good control and is fairly flexible which is light on your arm. It isn't as forgiving as the ezone 98 though so it depends on your playstyle as well. The vcore is overall more precise offer less spin while the ezone 98 offer less control but more spin.
Ezone 100. You can also do a 100L version if you need better maneuverability. Bigger sweet spot, put away power etc etc
Look around and you will notice the head sizes get bigger as you get older.
@@scouter_9599 I would love to see a video on this subject. You see why I asked - it is a "tricky question". I was personally confused by which racquet to chose as a 65 year old 5.0 all-court doubles specialist.It's hard for the average player to demo every racquet in the Yonex line - although you have. That is why I asked. Thank you for your input.
@@mrfofung I would love to see a video on this subject. You see why I asked - it is a "tricky question". I was personally confused by which racquet to chose as a 65 year old 5.0 all-court doubles specialist.It's hard for the average player to demo every racquet in the Yonex line - although you have. That is why I asked. Thank you for your input.
@@markmoore5981 Yeah it ultimately does come down to preference too so your best bet is to go to a tennis store that offers demos or demo off of tennis warehouse. I demoed all the rackets I ever used at a nearby tennis shop with their own private court multiple times before purchasing them so I know if I really liked it or not. Best of luck in finding the racket that best suits your playstyle!
How’s the sweet spot compared to the 100sq?
It is pretty forgiving considering it is a 95, however the sweet-spot is enhanced on all the 2023 VCORE racquets, so not quite as big as the 98 or 100. Troy, TW
Better question, where you get those gp turbos?😂
Where else but Tennis Warehouse?! We literally helped her stock up when the last ones were available, think she ended up getting 12 pairs of the last GPs that we had!
Michelle, TW
I mean it’s an unweighted 95. Gonna bring control vs a weighted 100.
Look at niece!
Add some weight, the power goes crazy with no impact on feel or control
At 3-9 or 12?
@@tophersuwitaeither
Great chemtrails...!! The same like in europe...